Filmmaker Heather Landsman joins to discuss Michael Haneke's
Benny's Video alongside a conversation about her latest film, the archival documentary
The Best of Me, which chronicles Björk stalker Ricardo López through unvarnished, segments of his 1996 video diaries, created as a means of sharing his ideological convictions and his plan to mail the pop singer a letter bomb. The film shares some thematic connections with
Benny's Video, exploring the potentially radicalizing effect of culutral ephemera, how mediation both reflects and proliferates the atomization of late capitalism, and how the distancing effect of the camera abstracts the boundaries between the incorporeal and the material.
We begin with a conversation about
The Best of Me, its creation, and how we should understand the case of the deeply disturbed López. Then we discuss Michael Haneke, his perspectives on violence and the media, and we take on some of the common criticisms of his work as overly didactic or sanctimonious. Finally, we look at
Benny's Video, it's considerations of mediated existence in the late 20th century, and it prescience with regard to the digital unreality we all inhabit online every day in the 2020s.
More info on
The Best of Me can be found here.
Watch the trailer for
The Best of Me.
Follow
Heather Landsman on Twitter.
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Our theme song is "Mirror" by
Chris Fish.